Tag Archives: fake followers

Is popularity the best measure of success? Maybe in some cases, but in the world of social media it’s fraught with problems.

Following on from my last blog, I decided to look at the follower numbers of Premier League clubs in a bit more detail. Is this particular vanity metric everything it seems?

Fake followers are an increasing problem. The black market for them is worth an estimated $360 million a year. Unsurprisingly websites have began to spring up to help users monitor their own dodgy fans.

Fake followers are big business

With the help of statuspeople.com, and because I had nothing better to do with my Monday night, I set about finding out the percentage of fake followers each club has. It is worth pointing out that the clubs in question probably haven’t acquired these followers in an underhand way, but have been targeted by bots because of their popularity.

The results are as follows:

Followers

Fake

Inactive

Active

Arsenal

2,672,000

43%

32%

25%

Aston Villa

203,000

31%

35%

34%

Cardiff City

65,000

17%

35%

48%

Chelsea

2,676,000

37%

30%

33%

Crystal Palace

57,000

18%

40%

42%

Everton

242,000

30%

38%

32%

Fulham

163,000

32%

42%

26%

Hull City

50,000

20%

40%

40%

Liverpool

1,941,000

31%

31%

38%

Manchester City

1,151,000

38%

33%

29%

Manchester Utd

872,000

30%

27%

43%

Newcastle United

284,000

32%

39%

29%

Norwich City

142,000

28%

42%

30%

Southampton

141,000

29%

39%

32%

Stoke City

135,000

30%

42%

28%

Sunderland

162,000

34%

44%

22%

Swansea City

154,000

26%

38%

36%

Tottenham

630,000

31%

37%

32%

West Bromwich Albion

96,000

27%

41%

32%

West Ham United

212,000

29%

40%

31%

It’s pretty apparent fake followers are a problem for all clubs to some degree. On average clubs have 602,400 followers, 30 per cent of which are duff.

Is this a big problem for clubs? Fake followers do nothing for credibility, however football teams are in a privileged position compared to other brands. The damage probably isn’t as severe for those as it is others, however it has repercussions on engagement particularly when tallied with the number of dead accounts. Take Arsenal, who can boast over 2,672,000 followers, but only 25 per cent of those are active. Only 668,000 people are getting the message.

And, of course, this exercise just further highlights the folly of putting so much stock in this sort of metric. Followers mean little if your content isn’t engaging, but they mean even less if a third of them don’t exist either.